Aim: Our appreciation of the past relies heavily on the survival of stone monuments, buildings and landscape features. They shape our sense of place and identity. If carved, this adds further dimensions and depth to that appreciation and can tell us much more about past peoples, their identities, beliefs, tastes, technologies and lives. And we are fortunate-carved stone monuments are all around us: prehistoric rock art, Roman, early medieval, later medieval and architectural sculpture, gravestones, and public monuments. This Framework aims to link, inspire, mobilize and direct the efforts of anyone with an interest in carved stone monuments in Scotland. It is driven by a desire for a more strategic approach to the opportunities and challeng...
The sophisticated drystone Iron-Age brochs of Northern Scotland, called Complex Atlantic Roundhouses...
Through the cold, stony context of their relationship to human remains, cemetery monuments blur the ...
ABSTRACT A PARTIAL READING OF THE STONES: A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF IRISH AND SCOTTISH OGHAM PILLAR ...
Aim: Our appreciation of the past relies heavily on the survival of stone monuments, buildings and l...
Aim: Our appreciation of the past relies heavily on the survival of stone monuments, buildings and l...
Aim: Our appreciation of the past relies heavily on the survival of stone monuments, buil...
An introduction to the newly published, online Future Thinking on Carved Stones in Scotland: A Resea...
It matters whether a carved stone is moved, moveable or portable. This influences perceptions of sig...
There is considerable value then in examining Scotland’s prehistoric carvings from the perspective o...
This work explores the utility of digital imaging techniques as research tools in the study of early...
This booklet aims to widen understanding and appreciation of prehistoric rock carvings in Scotland. ...
Introduction to co-edited bookA triad of research themes – materiality, biography and landscape – pr...
This paper contrasts two ways of thinking about the passage graves of Scotland and Ireland and the r...
The Hilton of Cadboll Pictish cross-slab is regarded as one of the finest examples of early medieval...
The research presented within this work proposes and develops a new approach to the analysis of earl...
The sophisticated drystone Iron-Age brochs of Northern Scotland, called Complex Atlantic Roundhouses...
Through the cold, stony context of their relationship to human remains, cemetery monuments blur the ...
ABSTRACT A PARTIAL READING OF THE STONES: A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF IRISH AND SCOTTISH OGHAM PILLAR ...
Aim: Our appreciation of the past relies heavily on the survival of stone monuments, buildings and l...
Aim: Our appreciation of the past relies heavily on the survival of stone monuments, buildings and l...
Aim: Our appreciation of the past relies heavily on the survival of stone monuments, buil...
An introduction to the newly published, online Future Thinking on Carved Stones in Scotland: A Resea...
It matters whether a carved stone is moved, moveable or portable. This influences perceptions of sig...
There is considerable value then in examining Scotland’s prehistoric carvings from the perspective o...
This work explores the utility of digital imaging techniques as research tools in the study of early...
This booklet aims to widen understanding and appreciation of prehistoric rock carvings in Scotland. ...
Introduction to co-edited bookA triad of research themes – materiality, biography and landscape – pr...
This paper contrasts two ways of thinking about the passage graves of Scotland and Ireland and the r...
The Hilton of Cadboll Pictish cross-slab is regarded as one of the finest examples of early medieval...
The research presented within this work proposes and develops a new approach to the analysis of earl...
The sophisticated drystone Iron-Age brochs of Northern Scotland, called Complex Atlantic Roundhouses...
Through the cold, stony context of their relationship to human remains, cemetery monuments blur the ...
ABSTRACT A PARTIAL READING OF THE STONES: A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF IRISH AND SCOTTISH OGHAM PILLAR ...